Check any Philippines phone number — find owner name, Globe or Smart carrier info, social profiles, and community reports instantly.
Our database cross-references NTC carrier data, public records, and community reports for every +63 Philippines number — mobile and landline.
Possible name matches linked to the number from public records and open directories.
Which network carries the number and whether it's mobile, landline, VoIP, or prepaid.
Publicly visible social media accounts and online profiles associated with the number.
Location-related records from public sources — current and historical.
Check if the number owner's data appears in known public breach records — leaked emails, passwords, or personal details.
A 0–10 spam probability score calculated from report volume and caller behavior patterns.
Paste the number as you see it — with or without the country code. We handle the formatting.
We cross-reference our carrier database, public records, community reports, and spam lists — results in under a second.
Owner name, carrier (Globe, Smart/PLDT, Dito), social profiles, and community reports — all on one page.
Philippine mobile numbers all start with 09xx. Landlines use 2-digit area codes. The prefix tells you which network and region.
| Prefix | Type | What it means | Cost to call back |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0917/0905/0906 | Mobile | Globe Telecom mobile | Standard mobile rate |
| 0918/0919/0920 | Mobile | Smart/PLDT mobile | Standard mobile rate |
| 0991/0992/0993 | Mobile | Dito Telecommunity | Standard mobile rate |
| 02 | Landline | Metro Manila (8-digit local) | Standard rate |
| 032 | Landline | Cebu City | Standard rate |
| 082 | Landline | Davao City | Standard rate |
| 1800 | Toll-Free | Freephone — all PH networks | Free to call |
Each area code maps to a region. Click any to explore reported numbers.
These are the most-reported caller fraud patterns in the Philippines right now.
Callers pose as GCash or Maya support claiming your wallet has suspicious activity. They request your OTP or 6-digit PIN to “verify” your account. No legitimate e-wallet provider will ever ask for your OTP. Report to BSP Financial Consumer Protection at 8708-7087.
Fraudsters impersonate SSS or PhilHealth officers offering unclaimed benefits or loan approvals. They ask for processing fees or personal data. Both agencies communicate through official channels and never collect fees by phone.
Callers offer high-paying overseas work and request placement fees, passport copies, or bank account details. Verify all overseas job offers through POEA (poea.gov.ph). Paying recruitment fees before signing a verified contract is illegal under Philippine law.
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